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Week in Apple: Leaked iPhone, iPad DHCP, CS5 and iWork reviews
The most popular Apple news from this last week was topped off by our reviews of Photoshop CS5 and iWork for iPad. But what about that crazy iPhone leak, the iPad's DHCP issues, and Apple's record fiscal quarter? All that and more are rolled into our conveniently packaged roundup.
Intel has revealed that it is developing a variant of the Linux-based MeeGo operating system that will run on conventional desktop and laptop computers. This move could substantially broaden MeeGo's scope, transforming it from a mobile platform into a general purpose Linux distro.
The open source MeeGo project emerged earlier this year when Intel and Nokia combined their respective mobile Linux platforms. MeeGo, which is endorsed by the Linux Foundation, aims to reduce fragmentation in the mobile ecosystem by providing a vendor-neutral Linux platform that supports a number of different hardware architectures and form factors. It is designed for mobile and embedded computing, with heavy optimization for ARM processors and Intel's Atom chips.
Intel and Nokia have been working to consolidate their communities and technical infrastructure while the development process gets off the ground. The first official release, which included installable binary images and kernel source code, was announced earlier this month. The project is attracting numerous partners and is gaining traction among hardware vendors. At the recent Linux Collaboration Summit, Intel and Nokia expressed optimism for the project's future and touted a roster of 27 companies that have signed on to the effort.
Intel's newly disclosed plan to bring MeeGo to desktop computers could fundamentally change the formula. According to a report by IDG that cites Intel software and services VP Doug Fisher, Intel is going to support MeeGo on budget Atom-based desktop computers and is also planning to release a version that will run on higher-end systems with standard Core chips.
Although Intel is apparently expanding MeeGo's focus to encompass conventional desktop computing, Fisher says that Intel doesn't plan to displace or compete with mainstream Linux distributions such as Ubuntu. Intel doesn't really want to be a Linux distributor—the company's goal is to supply a heavily optimized reference implementation that other Linux vendors can use. That is consistent with the approach that Intel pursued with Moblin prior to the launch of the MeeGo project.